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| USTelecom dailyLead® |
| January 29, 2007 |
Deutsche Telekom lowers 2007 earnings expectations
Tough domestic competition and a strong euro forced the German Deutsche Telekom to revise its 2007 earnings outlook down to $24.6 billion. The Washington Post/Associated Press (1/28)
BT rivals complain to European officials
Cable & Wireless, Carphone Warehouse and other BT rivals complained to the European Commission that the U.K.'s Ofcom is not able to regulate the British communications giant. The Times (London) (subscription required) (1/29)
Regulators, rivals pursue Qualcomm
Qualcomm is fighting a multifront legal battle as regulators in Europe, South Korea and Japan probe its business practices and Nokia and other wireless-equipment makers allege the company charges too much for its technologies. San Jose Mercury News (Calif.)/Associated Press (free registration) (1/28)
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Chip makers turn to hafnium
Intel Corp. and IBM Corp. each announced it would replace silicon with hafnium in a key part of its semiconductors, which researchers say will help the companies continue to improve semiconductor performance while cutting size and cost. One engineer said, "It's somewhat of an exaggeration, but it's like going from a propeller plane to a jet engine." Los Angeles Times (1/28)
Report forecasts growth for Web TV downloads, warns about piracy
Downloads from such Web sites as YouTube, Google Video, Movielink and Apple's iTunes Video will grow tenfold to be worth $6.3 billion in 2012, according to a report by the business information group Informa. The report cautions that providers of audiovisual content need to protect against piracy to avoid the mistakes made by the music industry. Financial Times (free content) (1/28)
In the U.S., the mobile Web still lags
Around the world, mobile-telephone users have access to a broad array of next-generation Web functionality, but in the U.S., use of the mobile Web has yet to gain popularity. An estimated 88% of mobiles on the market in the U.S. have some Web-browsing capability, but a modest 16.6% of users actually take advantage of the technology to go online, according to research firm M: Metrics Inc. The Wall Street Journal (1/29)
Bye-bye conventional TV, Microsoft chairman says
Within five years, viewers will abandon conventional broadcast television as PCs and TV sets merge and online video content explodes, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates said at the World Economic Forum in Switzerland. The Boston Globe/Reuters (1/27)
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Web, broadband companies fight over who pays
In a battle over the Internet's future, Web companies push for rules against tiered pricing, while cable and phone companies fight against regulation. Bloomberg Businessweek (1/29)
Localities take the offensive on franchise issue
Local governments are banding together to complain that the FCC is trying to "federalize" the cable-franchise process to facilitate the move by telecom companies to offer video services. The Washington Post/Associated Press (1/28)
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